NASA's Space Launch System rocket, powered by the Boeing -built core stage, lifted off at 6:35 p.m. ET. Eight and a half minutes into flight, the core stage successfully completed its mission and separated from the upper stage of the rocket, enabling NASA's Orion spacecraft, Integrity, to carry humankind around the moon. NASA astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover and Christina Koch, as well as Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen, will fly Integrity on a 10-day lunar journey. The core stage demonstrated several important operations, including the pre-launch fueling of both tanks, actuating the hydraulic system, igniting the engines, running thrust vector control programs in flight,
depleting the fuel tanks, shutting down the engines, and conducting successful separation and disposal maneuvers. The core stage of the rocket stands at 212 feet (almost 65 meters) and consists of a 196,000-gallon liquid oxygen tank and a 537,000-gallon liquid hydrogen tank. It also includes an intertank section that joins the two fuel reservoirs, a forward skirt that connects to the upper stage, and an engine section at the bottom with four RS-25 engines, which together produce 2.2 million pounds of thrust. A Boeing team manufactures the core stage at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, Louisiana, and uses components made by suppliers in more than 38 states. The Boeing team is preparing the next core stages for the Artemis III to V missions, which are already in production at Michoud and Kennedy.